Commentaire de Skreeran

Commentaire de Tharama

Commentaire de HydroKyogre

Wait, so... Worgen NPCs get to speak their own Gilnean language... But worgen players don't?

Commentaire de Banana9526

I laughed so hard when I was leaving the ship and noticed this in the chat.

Captain Brent the Black: E e E e e e

Commentaire de Kalados

Brentalfloss!

Commentaire de Azrilar

This could be completely wrong, but there is an oceanic bird named the Brent Goose or Brent. It has a few subspecies, one of which is the "Black" Brent. I've heard the bird in real life and it makes a sound occasionally which could be likened to "eee eee eee".

I don't know, just something to think about from a perspective world of warcraft doesn't generally take from *cough* killer whale sharks and remoras *cough*.

Commentaire de radicarl

I used Aura of Enfeeblement (the AoE version of Curse of Enfeeblement) as an Orc Warlock with Dark Apotheosis active.

What he says is:

Captain Brent the Black says: You think you know savagry?

I don't know if Blizzard is trolling us or if this is just an oversight, but it's worth noting that "savagry" was misspelled (it should be "savagery") which could lend itself to the oversight theory.

Commentaire de lucidfox

My theory on what happened:

In early Cataclysm beta, worgen players could speak Common and Gilnean. The latter was later pulled, leaving them with just Common.

The language, however, remained in the list of languages available to developers, even though it was not actually implemented (using just a stub implementation "translating" every word as "e").

When designing this NPC, some intern looked at the list of languages, saw "Gilnean" and thought it would fit a worgen NPC, without bothering to test what he would actually say as a result.

When the bug was discovered, the developers thought it was too hilarious to fix.